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What Is a Good Net Profit for a Construction Company?

  • timrhamlett
  • Jul 8
  • 5 min read

Updated: Jul 9

Let’s not sugar-coat it: running a construction company in the UK can feel like a daily battle. Whether it’s chasing late payments, dealing with unexpected site conditions, or fighting to protect your margins from eroding with every variation, it often feels like you're working harder just to keep your head above water.


So the question stands: Are you actually making money?


Because there’s a difference between turning over work and turning a profit. It’s not enough to stay busy – you need to stay profitable. That’s where knowing your net profit margin comes in. And not just knowing it, but understanding whether it’s good, bad or somewhere in between.


At Kingsmead Consultants, we work with builders and contractors, as well as property developers across the UK every day. Our job is to bring clarity to your costs, protect your margins, and help you build a sustainable, profitable business.


In this guide, we’ll cover:


  • What net profit really means for your construction business

  • What a “good” net profit margin looks like

  • Why many firms struggle to maintain profitability

  • Strategies to improve your margin

  • Real-world steps you can take today


If you want to take control of your business finances and secure your long-term profitability, read on.


What Is Net Profit in Construction?


Before we go further, let’s clarify the terminology. Net profit is what’s left after everything is paid. That means direct costs (labour, materials, subcontractors), overheads, prelims, plant, insurances, office staff, and tax.


Net Profit = Total Revenue – Total Expenses (including overheads and tax)


This is different from gross profit, which only considers your direct project costs. Net profit shows the full picture – and it’s the number you should be tracking if you want to build a resilient, investable business.


What Is a "Good" Net Profit Margin for a Construction Company?


Most UK construction businesses operate on razor-thin net profit margins. According to data from The Access Group and Construction News:


  • Average net profit for general contractors: 1.5% – 3%

  • Top-performing specialists (M&E, fit-out, utilities): 8% – 15%

  • Design and Build contractors: 6% – 10%

  • Residential builders: 3% – 5%


In practical terms, a business turning over £2 million per year with a 2% net margin is only clearing £40,000 in profit annually. One bad job could wipe out that figure completely.

If your construction business is delivering less than 5% net profit, it’s time to take a serious look at how you're operating.


At Kingsmead Consultants, we regularly carry out financial health reviews for contractors and help clients identify quick wins and long-term margin strategies.


Want to know how your business stacks up?


Call us on 01270 323 515 or get in touch to schedule a consultation.


Common Reasons Profit Margins Suffer in Construction


The challenges are well known to anyone in the industry:


1. Underquoting Work to Win Jobs


There’s enormous pressure to price low just to secure work, especially in competitive residential markets. But cutting margin at the front end nearly always results in stress, variation disputes, and financial losses during delivery.


2. Inadequate Scope Definition


Poor drawings and loose specifications create confusion, disputes and cost overruns. If the scope isn’t locked down at tender stage, your profit will erode rapidly as the job progresses.


3. Uncontrolled Variations


It’s one thing to agree a change with the client; it’s another to actually recover the cost. Delayed approvals, unclear instructions, and poor documentation all contribute to lost profit.


4. Cashflow Issues and Retentions


Even if a job is profitable on paper, cashflow bottlenecks can cripple your business. Many contractors rely on overdrafts or director loans to fund projects – that’s not sustainable.


5. Overhead Creep


Fixed costs such as admin staff, vehicle leases, office space, and insurance premiums often increase without regular scrutiny. You must benchmark overheads regularly and adjust.


6 Proven Strategies to Improve Net Profit


If you’re not satisfied with your current net profit margins, here are the proven strategies we advise clients to implement:


1. Build Your Pricing Around Profit


Start with your desired profit margin and work backwards. Too many companies start with the job cost and add a small mark-up. That approach guarantees you stay stuck at the bottom of the profit curve.


2. Use Live Cost Tracking


Job costing shouldn’t be a year-end exercise. Real-time data enables you to spot when labour overruns, material prices spike or subcontractors drift. A Quantity Surveyor can implement CVRs (Cost Value Reconciliations) and cost dashboards to keep you in control.


3. Improve Prelims and Overhead Recovery


Most firms under-allow for prelims, especially on smaller projects. If your site manager, welfare, insurances, and vehicles aren’t properly apportioned to the job, your margin will suffer.


4. Tighten Subcontractor Agreements


Vague scope descriptions, verbal instructions, and loose terms all create opportunities for disputes and inflated valuations. We help contractors formalise their supply chain documentation to lock down risk and protect cost certainty.


5. Systemise Repetition


Repeat designs. Repeat supply chain. Repeat contract types. Reduce variability in how projects are delivered and you’ll drastically improve delivery efficiency and reduce rework.


6. Engage a Chartered Quantity Surveyor


A professional QS doesn’t just measure and price – we identify risk, provide procurement strategies, manage change, and guide commercial decision-making. Our involvement protects your margin before, during and after the project.



Real-World Example: From 2.1% to 8.3% Net Profit


We recently worked with a contractor specialising in residential extensions and small commercial units. They were busy, turning over £1.2m per year, but profits were inconsistent and cashflow was tight.


After a full commercial review, we implemented the following:


  • Prelim rate uplift across all new tenders

  • Clear subcontractor scopes and written variation procedures

  • Live job costing with monthly CVRs

  • Overhead benchmarking and vehicle cost reduction

  • Early-stage budget reviews for private clients to manage expectations


Result: Net profit rose from 2.1% to 8.3% in under 12 months.


This is achievable. It just requires structure, discipline and expert advice.


When to Worry About Your Margins


You don’t need to wait until year-end to know something is wrong. If any of the following are happening, it’s time to act:


  • You’re working hard but the bank account doesn’t reflect it

  • You’re frequently dipping into director loans or personal funds

  • You don’t know your profit per job until long after completion

  • You’re under pressure to keep pricing low just to stay busy

  • You win projects but struggle to maintain control of costs


None of these are sustainable.


Kingsmead Consultants has helped contractors across the North West and beyond to stabilise cashflow, recover margin, and grow their businesses. We can help you too.


How Kingsmead Consultants Can Help


Our team of Chartered Quantity Surveyors brings decades of experience in:



We don’t just count bricks. We protect your bottom line.


If you’re looking to:


  • Improve profit on your next project

  • Understand where you’re losing money

  • Win better quality work

  • Benchmark your pricing and recovery rates


Then now is the time to speak to us.


Final Thoughts from Kingsmead Consultants


In construction, a good net profit isn’t about luck. It’s about pricing smart, delivering efficiently, managing risk, and having the right commercial advice behind you.


Whether you’re a general builder, specialist contractor, or developer, the benchmark for good net profit should be upwards of 5%.


If you're not hitting that, don’t keep guessing.


Book a consultation with Kingsmead Consultants and let us help you put the right commercial systems in place to build a more profitable business.


✅Call us today on 01270 323 515✅ 



We’re here to help construction businesses keep more of what they earn – and grow with

confidence.

 
 
 

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